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Oregon climbs out of 18-point hole, downs Cal

Oregon head coach Dana Altman yells at the referees after a call in the first half as the Oregon Ducks host the UCLA Bruins Saturday, Dec. 30, 2023, at Matthew Knight Arena in Eugene, Ore.

Jermaine Couisnard scored 18 points to help Oregon come back from an 18-point, first-half deficit and beat California 80-73 on Saturday night in Eugene, Ore.

Jadrian Tracey added 14 points and Jackson Shelstad scored 10 of his 12 points in the second half for Oregon (13-3, 5-0 Pac-12), which improved to 5-0 in conference play for the first time since the 2016-17 season, when the Ducks eventually went to the Final Four.

Cal (6-11, 2-4) got 20 points from Jaylon Tyson, who entered Saturday as the Pac-12’s leading scorer.

The Golden Bears saw their lead balloon to 41-23 in the first half after shooting 63.2 percent from the floor as a team through the game’s first 13 minutes. Of its first 19 shots, Cal made 12, including four 3-pointers, and led 32-19 at the 7:31 mark.

Oregon struggled to hit open shots until the final few minutes of the first half. A highlight for the Ducks was the return of center N’Faly Dante from a knee injury.

Dante was named to the Pac-12 preseason all-conference first team and was playing in just his second game of the season on Saturday.

Dante checked in at the 14:36 mark of the first half and dunked 30 seconds later, tying the game at 12. But Cal got hot, playing at a quick pace while creating offense early in the shot clock.

Back-to-back close-range shots from Fardaws Aimaq gave the Golden Bears their 41-23 lead with 3:59 to play in the first. Aimaq had 14 of his 18 points before intermission.

The Ducks fought back loudly, cutting the lead to four, 43-39, with a 16-2 run to end the first half. Couisnard hit three 3-pointers over the final 2:57 of the frame.

The second half was tight, with Oregon going ahead 54-51 on Kario Oquendo’s 3 at the 11:34 mark. Thirty-eight seconds later, Oquendo threw down a one-handed dunk over Aimaq, bringing the home crowd to its feet.

The slam turned out to be a pivotal play, as the Ducks would go up by as many as nine and hold off the Golden Bears, who made it a two-point game down the stretch and had chances to draw even but never could.

Keeshawn Barthelemy’s floater with 1:06 to play gave the Ducks a 78-69 lead, effectively ending Cal’s chance of putting together a comeback.

–Field Level Media

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